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Case Reports
. 1998 Mar;22(3):310-8.
doi: 10.1097/00000478-199803000-00005.

Primary cutaneous Ewing's sarcoma: immunophenotypic and molecular cytogenetic evaluation of five cases

Affiliations
Case Reports

Primary cutaneous Ewing's sarcoma: immunophenotypic and molecular cytogenetic evaluation of five cases

S L Hasegawa et al. Am J Surg Pathol. 1998 Mar.

Abstract

Cutaneous small blue cell tumors are relatively uncommon and include primary lesions of either adnexal or neuroendocrine differentiation, as well as metastatic disease. Extraosseous Ewing's sarcoma/malignant primitive neuroectodermal tumor (MPNET) rarely may occur as a primary, superficially based neoplasm in children and young adults. We describe a series of five cases of Ewing's sarcoma/malignant primitive neuroectodermal tumor occurring as a primary cutaneous malignancy supported diagnostically both by immunohistochemical stains and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). All five cases occurred as a solitary dermal nodule and were located in the lower extremities (3 cases), the axilla (1 case), and the flank (1 case). Three of the cases were clinically polypoid. Four of the five patients were female, and age at presentation ranged form 8 to 50 years of age (median, 18 years). All five tumors consisted of nodular proliferations of monomorphous, small blue cells with round, vesicular nuclei, and scant to moderate cytoplasm that were uniformly immunoreactive for the CD99 cell surface glycoprotein in a characteristic membranous pattern. Fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis of paraffin-embedded tissue revealed that three of four tumors were positive for a chromosomal translocation involving the EWS locus at 22q12, seen in more than 90% of cases of Ewing's sarcoma/malignant primitive neuroectodermal tumor. One case was not analyzable. All five patients were treated using local excision, and two patients additionally received postoperative chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Clinical follow-up is available in three cases (median duration, 33 months) and to date none has shown evidence of either local recurrence or metastasis. Because similar cases reported in the literature have likewise had favorable clinical courses after excision, primary cutaneous Ewing's sarcoma/malignant primitive neuroectodermal tumor may represent a clinically favorable subset of this otherwise highly aggressive neoplasm.

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